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glaucus-or the wonders of the shore(格劳高斯)-第4部分
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vanished out of the British Isles。 And what is it which tells him that
strange story? Yon smooth and rounded surface of rock; polished;
remark; across the strata and against the grain; and furrowed here and
there; as if by iron talons; with long parallel scratches。 It was the
crawling of a glacier which polished that rock…face; the stones fallen
from Snowdon peak into the half…liquid lake of ice above; which
ploughed those furrows。 AEons and aeons ago; before the time when
Adam first
〃Embraced his Eve in happy hour; And every bird in Eden burst In
carol; every bud in flower;〃
those marks were there; the records of the 〃Age of ice;〃 slight; truly;
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to be effaced by the next farmer who needs to build a wall; but
unmistakeable; boundless in significance; like Crusoe's one savage
footprint on the sea…shore; and the naturalist acknowledges the finger…
mark of God; and wonders; and worships。
Happy; especially; is the sportsman who is also a naturalist: for as
he roves in pursuit of his game; over hills or up the beds of streams
where no one but a sportsman ever thinks of going; he will be certain to
see things noteworthy; which the mere naturalist would never find;
simply because he could never guess that they were there to be found。
I do not speak merely of the rare birds which may be shot; the curious
facts as to the habits of fish which may be observed; great as these
pleasures are。 I speak of the scenery; the weather; the geological
formation of the country; its vegetation; and the living habits of its
denizens。 A sportsman; out in all weathers; and often dependent for
success on his knowledge of 〃what the sky is going to do;〃 has
opportunities for becoming a meteorologist which no one beside but a
sailor possesses; and one has often longed for a scientific gamekeeper or
huntsman; who; by discovering a law for the mysterious and seemingly
capricious phenomena of 〃scent;〃 might perhaps throw light on a
hundred dark passages of hygrometry。 The fisherman; too; … what an
inexhaustible treasury of wonder lies at his feet; in the subaqueous world
of the commonest mountain burn! All the laws which mould a world
are there busy; if he but knew it; fattening his trout for him; and making
them rise to the fly; by strange electric influences; at one hour rather than
at another。 Many a good geognostic lesson; too; both as to the nature of
a country's rocks; and as to the laws by which strata are deposited; may
an observing man learn as he wades up the bed of a trout… stream; not to
mention the strange forms and habits of the tribes of water…insects。
Moreover; no good fisherman but knows; to his sorrow; that there are
plenty of minutes; ay; hours; in each day's fishing in which he would be
right glad of any employment better than trying to
〃Call spirits from the vasty deep;〃
who will not
〃Come when you do call for them。〃
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What to do; then? You are sitting; perhaps; in your coracle; upon
some mountain tarn; waiting for a wind; and waiting in vain。
〃Keine luft an keine seite; Todes…stille f 乺 chterlich;〃
as G 攖 he has it …
〃Und der schiffer sieht bek 乵 mert Glatte fl 刢 he rings umher。〃
You paddle to the shore on the side whence the wind ought to come;
if it had any spirit in it; tie the coracle to a stone; light your cigar; lie
down on your back upon the grass; grumble; and finally fall asleep。 In
the meanwhile; probably; the breeze has come on; and there has been
half…an…hour's lively fishing curl; and you wake just in time to see the
last ripple of it sneaking off at the other side of the lake; leaving all as
dead…calm as before。
Now how much better; instead of falling asleep; to have walked
quietly round the lake side; and asked of your own brains and of Nature
the question; 〃How did this lake come here? What does it mean?〃
It is a hole in the earth。 True; but how was the hole made? There
must have been huge forces at work to form such a chasm。 Probably
the mountain was actually opened from within by an earthquake; and
when the strata fell together again; the portion at either end of the chasm;
being perhaps crushed together with greater force; remained higher than
the centre; and so the water lodged between them。 Perhaps it was
formed thus。 You will at least agree that its formation must have been a
grand sight enough; and one during which a spectator would have had
some difficulty in keeping his footing。
And when you learn that this convulsion probably took plus at the
bottom of an ocean hundreds of thousands of years ago; you have at
least a few thoughts over which to ruminate; which will make you at
once too busy to grumble; and ashamed to grumble。
Yet; after all; I hardly think the lake was formed in this way; and
suspect that it may have been dry for ages after it emerged from the
primeval waves; and Snowdonia was a palm…fringed island in a tropic
sea。 Let us look the place over more fully。
You see the lake is nearly circular; on the side where we stand the
pebbly beach is not six feet above the water; and slopes away steeply
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